The political correspondents are revolting. In the face of a campaign that is painfully stage-managed, slogan sterile and encounter-free, the journalists are taking to their in-house forum (Twitter) to moan about the mundane manipulation by the two main parties. In this long campaign will this change the political dynamics
Against prior expectations the 2017 General Election proved to be particularly dramatic, repeatedly ...
In academic political communications studies there is this idea of the ‘informed society’. I even on...
The 2017 General Election will likely be remembered as the campaign where the once dominant forms of...
Remember when we used to say that this is going to be the ‘Twitter’ or ‘Facebook’ or ‘TV debates’ el...
In the wake of this shock result should journalists now abandon their previously-held beliefs about ...
How well has the UK’s news media done in staging the debate and informing the public? Some outlets h...
Can we stop talking about ‘the media’? We’re all in this together. Post-Trump, post-Truth, post-Brex...
From Twitter to the BBC, media platforms were perceived as having had ‘a bad election’. The story of...
The ‘feral beasts’ of the Westminster press corps are quite rightly chasing the political fall-out o...
This article was first published by the Political Studies Association as part of an excellent collec...
On Tuesday last week, Jeremy Corbyn launched his party’s General Election campaign in Manchester. ...
A combination of new and very traditional media could yet win the election for Labour, according to ...
This is a weird election, especially from a media point of view. As I predicted, it is the TV electi...
Politics today is inextricably bound to the media, indeed it is now a routine assumption that the me...
The last two years have been times of turbulence for the BBC, and other broadcasters, in terms of th...
Against prior expectations the 2017 General Election proved to be particularly dramatic, repeatedly ...
In academic political communications studies there is this idea of the ‘informed society’. I even on...
The 2017 General Election will likely be remembered as the campaign where the once dominant forms of...
Remember when we used to say that this is going to be the ‘Twitter’ or ‘Facebook’ or ‘TV debates’ el...
In the wake of this shock result should journalists now abandon their previously-held beliefs about ...
How well has the UK’s news media done in staging the debate and informing the public? Some outlets h...
Can we stop talking about ‘the media’? We’re all in this together. Post-Trump, post-Truth, post-Brex...
From Twitter to the BBC, media platforms were perceived as having had ‘a bad election’. The story of...
The ‘feral beasts’ of the Westminster press corps are quite rightly chasing the political fall-out o...
This article was first published by the Political Studies Association as part of an excellent collec...
On Tuesday last week, Jeremy Corbyn launched his party’s General Election campaign in Manchester. ...
A combination of new and very traditional media could yet win the election for Labour, according to ...
This is a weird election, especially from a media point of view. As I predicted, it is the TV electi...
Politics today is inextricably bound to the media, indeed it is now a routine assumption that the me...
The last two years have been times of turbulence for the BBC, and other broadcasters, in terms of th...
Against prior expectations the 2017 General Election proved to be particularly dramatic, repeatedly ...
In academic political communications studies there is this idea of the ‘informed society’. I even on...
The 2017 General Election will likely be remembered as the campaign where the once dominant forms of...